Posted on 05/23/2015 4:46:35 AM PDT by Kaslin
Mackenzie Fraiser is 12-years-old. Shes a sixth grader at Somerset Academy, a charter school in North Las Vegas, Nevada. Mackenzie is also a Christian.
In February, she was instructed by her technology teacher to create a PowerPoint demonstration about her life. One of the requirements was to include a slide with an inspirational message.
So Mackenzie decided to use a Bible verse specifically John 3:16. That familiar passage reads: For God so loved the world that He gave his only Son that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life.
But the teacher had a problem with Mackenzies inspirational message. She explained to the class that none of the students would be allowed to use any Bible verses or quotations from the Book of Mormon.
The teacher had a problem with Mackenzies inspirational message. She explained to the class that none of the students would be allowed to use any Bible verses or quotations from the Book of Mormon. The message was clear you cannot be inspired by religion.
The message was clear you cannot be inspired by religion.
Mackenzie, whose father is a pastor, told me she was terribly disappointed and concerned.
When I was told I couldnt use a Bible verse, I was afraid I was doing something wrong, she said.
So Mackenzie obeyed the teachers edict and settled for a mundane secular saying.
A few months later, the little girl received another assignment. This time, she was told to address the topic of self-esteem.
She discussed the assignment with her parents, Tim and Kate Fraiser. They suggested she acknowledge she derives her self-esteem from having been made in the image of God.
It was at that point, Mackenzie said she would not be allowed to mention the Almighty. Her teacher had once again barred any reference to faith in the technology classroom.
Tim thought his daughter must have been mistaken. Perhaps she misunderstood the teachers directive? So he fired off an email to the school seeking clarification.
The message he received was jaw dropping. The school confirmed that that teacher told students to refrain from using religious references. They said she was simply following school law expectations.
The U.S. Department of Education states that students have the right to engage in voluntary prayer or religious discussion free from discrimination, but that does not include the right to have a captive audience listen or compel other students to participate, read the email from Assistant Principal Jenyan Martinez.
When Mackenzie created the project with the expectation she would present the Biblical saying to the class, the matter became one of having a captive audience that would be subject to her religious beliefs, she added. Had the assignment been designed to simply hand in for a grade, this would not have been an issue.
The Fraisers contacted Liberty Institute, a religious liberty law firm that specializes in these sorts of legal disputes.
Government officials telling little girls they cant mention God is not the law, said Liberty Institute President Kelly Shackelford. Its unlawful discrimination and its morally wrong.
Liberty Institute attorney Jeremy Dys is representing the family. He said the U.S. Department of Education clearly permits students to use Bible verses in class assignments.
If a school official tells students that their beliefs cannot be expressed in class assignments, it teaches them that religion is bad, Dys told me. This case really demonstrates why it is important to protect religious liberty."
Theyve given the school 10 days to remedy the situation and that includes an apology and a promise not to censor religious content in assignments.
So here's what needs to happen. Somerset Academy needs to follow the law. They need to allow Mackenzie to redo her assignment with the Bible verses. And they need to apologize. If they fail to do so, the federal government should revoke their funding.
A few weeks ago the Department of Education threatened to withhold funding for any public school that did not protect the rights of transgender students. I believe schools should be held to the same standard for religious students.
Definition of SUPPURATE
: to form or discharge pus
The correct word is "supports"
So what should she be inspired by? The state? Satan? Dog feces?
Nanny State PING!
( Sitting here chuckling at the spell choice of words.)
There may have been other reasons not to homeschool but you are definitely a literate person. Helping with homework would not have been a reason.
Did you visit your area's homeschooling groups before ruling out homeschooling for your children?
Honestly, people choose not to homeschool for invalid reasons. They simply have not fully investigated what is involved in homeschooling and their own K-12 experience influences their decision. A visit to one of the meetings of their local homeschooling groups would have provided the information needed to make a sound decision regarding homeschooling.
I am talking of my personal experience. I wished when my children grew up I could have sometimes gone to classes with them so I could have learned the different systems than I learned when I was educated in Germany. I could have taught the teachers to, that from the third grade on students should be taught only to use ink pens
Some children will need to be institutionalized for their schooling. It is a shame. We need orphanages, too, but no one is claiming that orphanages are the best way to rear a child.
This is very interesting.
The girl’s father is an associate pastor at a large evangelical church.
Most “conservatives” if they vote at all in school board races just go with the “friendly incumbent”, a likely liberal whose name they happen to recognize.
Right on! I lost count of how many times I heard people use that reason to send a homeschooled kid back to public highschool. Sheer madness.
If you are qualified to raise kids the you are qualified to homeschool. Really. The statistics are in and even parents with no high school diploma do as good a job as the average public schooled kid.
“I could have never home schooled my children. I was never able to help them with their home work, as I was educated in Germany which has a different system.”
So? who says you have to teach them some ‘American’ way? Many homeschooler teach in ways that are far stranger than your German schools were. Seriously. MUCH different. And they still work. Lots of techniques work. It is just not that hard. The variety of curriculum available today is ASTOUNDING
**Government officials telling little girls they cant mention God is not the law, said Liberty Institute President Kelly Shackelford. Its unlawful discrimination and its morally wrong.**
One to follow for I believe the girl and her family will win this case.
Yeah. Some parents are in prison.
Are you sensitive about your own handing of your children off to the state? Back a few years ago when home schooling made a lot of people defensive and I used to get a lot of responses protesting that busy people just don’t have time what with both spouses working and football games to go to and “What about socialization?” Almost no one protests his own unfitness or lack of inclination and time any more.
Some of us actually take the time to research a candidate, and vote with a little knowledge.
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